Нью-Мексико мужийн Гуадалупе ууланд орших Лечугилла агуй нь дэлхийн хамгийн урт бөгөөд нууцлаг агуйн системүүдийн нэгд тооцогддог.
Карлсбад Кавернс үндэсний цэцэрлэгт хүрээлэнгийн нутаг дэвсгэрт байрлах энэхүү агуй нь 244.80 км үргэлжилдэг бөгөөд таван сая жилийн өмнө бүрэлджээ. Агуйн онцлог нь агаар мандлын даралтын өөрчлөлтөөс хамааран “амьсгалах” үзэгдэл юм. Ихэнх агуйд агаарын урсгал нь температурын зөрүүгээр үүсдэг бол Лечугилла нь даралтын өөрчлөлтөөр агаар сэлгэдэг цөөн тооны агуйн нэг ажээ.
Энэхүү агуй нь гадаргын усны урсгалаар бус, харин гүнээс дээш чиглэсэн усны урсгал болон хур тунадасны холимог нөлөөлсөн гипогенийн үйл явцаар үүссэн байна. Үүний үр дүнд хүхрийн шар тунадас болон гипсэн талстууд зэрэг ховор эрдсийн тогтоцууд бий болжээ. Ялангуяа “Шандельерийн бүжгийн танхим” хэмээх хэсэгт 6.1 метр хүртэл урттай асар том гипсэн талстууд байдаг нь дэлхийн хамгийн гайхалтай газар зүйн тогтоцуудын нэгд тооцогддог.
Агуйн алслагдсан байдал болон хүнд хэцүү нөхцөл нь судлаачид болон баримтат киноны багуудад томоохон сорилт болдог. BBC-ийн “Planet Earth” багийнхан тус агуйд нэвтрэхийн тулд хоёр жилийн турш зөвшөөрөл хөөцөлдөж, тоног төхөөрөмжөө тээвэрлэхэд найман цагийг зарцуулж байжээ. Судлаач Хью Корди агуйн доторх ертөнцийг хөлдөөгч дотор орсон мэт, гаднын ертөнцөөс тусгаарлагдсан онцгой орчин хэмээн тодорхойлсон байдаг.
Дэлгэрэнгүйг эх сурвалжаас харах
↓Эх сурвалжийг нээх ↓
Deep beneath New Mexico’s Guadalupe Mountains lies Lechuguilla Cave, one of the most remarkable systems ever discovered. Known for its giant crystal formations, rare geology and unusual ability to “breathe,” the cave has remained largely isolated for millions of years.
Its remote passages have attracted scientists, explorers and documentary crews eager to study an underground world unlike almost any other. Even today, much of the cave remains unexplored.
A Cave That Literally Breathes
Located within Carlsbad Caverns National Park, Lechuguilla Cave stretches for 152.11 miles (244.80 kilometers), making it the ninth-longest explored in the world. Scientists estimate that it formed around five million years ago, and its vast network extends deep into the Guadalupe Mountains. One of the strangest things about Lechuguilla is that it “breathes.”
As air pressure changes outside the subterranean network, air is pushed in and out of its passages. While airflow is common in caves, Discover Wildlife explains that it is usually caused by temperature differences rather than shifts in atmospheric pressure.
Lechuguilla belongs to a relatively small group known as breathing caves. Most of these have been found in the United States, with only a few others identified elsewhere, including two in Europe and one in Malaysia. There also seems to be a link between breathing undergound system and size. Four of the ten longest cave systems on Earth fall into this category, and Lechuguilla is one of them.
Home To Giant Crystals And Rare Mineral Formations
Lechuguilla did not form in the same way as the most hidden underground world. Instead of being carved mainly by water flowing down from the surface, it developed through a process known as hypogenic formation, where water rose from below and mixed with rainwater before dissolving the surrounding rock. This process may explain why it contains so many unusual mineral formations. The source highlights rare lemon-yellow sulfur deposits as well as large gypsum structures found throughout the system.

The most famous of these formations can be seen in the Chandelier Ballroom. There, clusters of gypsum crystals hang from the ceiling like enormous chandeliers. Some reach lengths of up to 20 feet, or about 6.1 meters.
The chamber has become one of the defining features of Lechuguilla and is often cited as one of the most impressive underground spaces ever documented.
The Cave No One Was Prepared For
Lechuguilla reached a wider audience when the BBC’s Planet Earth team filmed inside the underground chamber in the early 2000s. Getting there was not easy. BBC information released at the time noted that the crew spent two years negotiating access before they were allowed to enter. Once permission was granted, transporting equipment through the site took another eight hours.
Producer Huw Cordey later described descending Boulder Falls, a 60-metre abseil in complete darkness, before reaching a series of chambers with names such as Snow White’s Passage, Tinseltown, Land of Awes and Prickly Ice Cube Room.
Yet it was the Chandelier Ballroom that made the biggest impression. Speaking in a BBC press pack, Cordey recalled seeing six-metre-long clusters of crystals hanging from the ceiling.
“The sight was utterly other-worldly,” he said. “I felt as if I’d been miniaturised and stuck in a large empty freezer compartment.”
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